[blind-democracy] Re: charge dismissed against blind protester at capitol

  • From: "joe harcz Comcast" <joeharcz@xxxxxxxxxxx>
  • To: <blind-democracy@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • Date: Mon, 22 Aug 2016 19:14:54 -0400

Let's see it only took again $5,000 and several trips to lansing and Mason, and hundreds of man hours by yours trully doing legal work for free and then getting intrepid, disabled folks without any accommodations to travel sometimes hours, and more to get them to do the right thing.

Of course, that doesn't leave the lying, insolent and abusive Michigan Capitol Police and the State agents who orderred this insult upon our human rights on our very civil rights anniversary off the hook.

They offerred me "trespassing this morning. I and others said, "I'll not accept a trespassing charge on the people's house for the crime of carrying leaflets for crying out loud.
\
----- Original Message ----- From: "Carl Jarvis" <carjar82@xxxxxxxxx>
To: <blind-democracy@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Monday, August 22, 2016 5:46 PM
Subject: [blind-democracy] Re: charge dismissed against blind protester at capitol


Good for you, Joe.  You must still have that lucky 1943 Silver Penny
in your right shoe.

Carl Jarvis


On 8/22/16, joe harcz Comcast <joeharcz@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
Charge dismissed against blind protester at Michigan Capitol

Paul Egan,

Detroit Free Press 10:38 a.m. EDT August 22, 2016

636073878677336936-joe-harcz-and-attorney.jpgBuy Photo



Joe Harcz (left) and his attorney Brian Kamar, during an earlier hearing at
Lansing district court.(Photo: Paul Egan/Detroit Free Press)Buy Photo



MASON -- Minutes before a trial was scheduled to begin, Ingham County
prosecutors today dismissed a charge against a blind activist who was
arrested while

demonstrating outside the state Capitol in Lansing last year.



Paul Joseph (Joe) Harcz, 63, of Mt. Morris was charged with resisting and
obstructing police, a two-year felony.



Harcz was arrested on Sept. 17 when he tried to cross a police barricade to
enter a 25th anniversary celebration of the federal Americans With
Disabilities

Act, taking place on the Capitol lawn, after police identified him as a
protester they believed was intent on disrupting the event.



"In the interests of justice, the people are moving to have this case
dismissed," assistant Prosecuting Attorney Andrew Stevens told Ingham
Circuit Court

Judge William Collette on Monday morning, minutes before the bench trial was
scheduled to begin.



Stevens didn't elaborate, but Interim Ingham County Prosecutor Gretchen
Whitmer, who was appointed to the post after Prosecutor Stuart Dunnings was
charged

with prostitution-related charges, said she made the call after reviewing
the file, viewing a videotape of the incident, and discussing the case with
Stevens.



"While we all have an interest in ensuring protests at the Capitol remain
safe, we must also observe an individual's fundamental right to protest,"
Whitmer

said in an e-mail to the Free Press.



Stevens asked for the dismissal after a blind witness for Harcz asked
prosecutors to move the case to Lansing, because of difficulties accessing
the Mason

courthouse through public transit and ADA issues at the historic
courthouse.



Stevens told Collette the courtroom is ADA-compliant and the courthouse has
Braille markings in the elevator, but still requested the dismissal.



Harcz was

protesting the fact organizers chose the Capitol

as the site for the event, when the historic building lacked Braille signage
and other features to make it fully ADA-compliant. He was also protesting
the

fact that some of the organizers of the event, as permitted by federal law,
paid sub-minimum wages to some disabled workers.



Source:

http://www.freep.com/story/news/local/michigan/2016/08/22/trial-begins-blind-protester-arrested-capitol/89078270/




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